Sorry I haven't responded earlier. Over the past 6 months our team in Stockport have written a document that lays out our ideas going forward. Our 6 key policies for Stockport are as follows - invest in our district centres and our local economy, tackle traffic, parking and pollution, fight for our schools and families, protect people and our communities, make the coy council work for you, putting real power in the hands of local people.
If I am elected, and that is a BIG if , because elections in Marple South and High Lane are always close, I am determined to work with our Stockport team to work towards these objectives. I'll tell you what that looks like locally in Marple South and High Lane.
Our 21 councillors in Stockport Council will not support the current proposal for 500 houses in High Lane. Nor will I.
Myself and Colin McAlister are determined to cut out a good number of the speed bumps in Marple South and High Lane. We realise that sometimes they have been reducing speeding on some roads but, on balance, local people are more unhappy with the extra pollution that they create, slow traffic between Marple and High Lane, and damages to vehicles. We would work towards leaving juat a few of them to support local people with unnecessary speeding on local roads.
Marple pool is an interesting and agonising issue. There are several options on the table but 2 more obvious solutions. We build a new facility or we repair the current facility. With a Labour-led council in Stockport and in times of austerity I doubt that they will find the funds to build a new pool anytime soon, so I lean towards repairing the current facility. Whether we decide as a Lib Dem group to go for either option or possibly both, this would be easier for us if we were leading the council, a possibility in the next couple of years.
We are unhappy with cuts to our local council budget, education and Stepping Hill hospital; we do believe in essence that bringing budgets to a local level can give local people more say in regard to what money is spent and where.
We are very concerned about air quality in our local area. We want to ensure that measurements are made, and that people in our regional and national bodies are aware of our local situation and accountable to these measurements.
I'm a pragmatist in my politics and so my answer to your list of questions regarding brexit may not be ideal. At a local level Brexit is not a direct issue in our election in the same way it would be in a general election.
I voted remain because I thought it would be the right thing for our economy. If the politicians can't get to grips with brexit then a 2nd referendum might be the only way we can move forward. I think most people understand that if we did have a 2nd referendum the vote would be majority remain. This is a complicated issue in regard to our democracy, and what happens after that is not something that I can speculate on.
I'm not sure if a 2nd referendum/people's vote will ever happen ? I feel quite sure that Labour and the Conservatives don't want it.